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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

An appraisal of federal corporate income tax proposals from 1954 to 1964

Bamford, Frederick Emerson January 1966 (has links)
Thesis (Ph.D.)--Boston University / PLEASE NOTE: Boston University Libraries did not receive an Authorization To Manage form for this thesis or dissertation. It is therefore not openly accessible, though it may be available by request. If you are the author or principal advisor of this work and would like to request open access for it, please contact us at open-help@bu.edu. Thank you. / The purpose of this work is to examine the basic characteristics of the federal corporate income tax and to ascertain the importance of legislative proposals aimed at alleviating inequities and problems caused by the tax. This study is focused on the period 1954 to 1964 and subjects to economic analysis the proposed legislative amendments to the federal corporate income tax law. The several advocates of corporate tax reform concentrated their efforts on (1) Proposals to provide relief to small and new business, including measures to regulate corporate size and activities, and to modify the rate structure in order to eliminate or reduce various tax-induced inequities; (2) Proposals to reduce the disparity of tax treatment between competing enterprises and the use of tax incentives to encourage and direct United States investment abroad; (3) Proposals to encourage modernization and expansion of the nation's productive facilities and to increase the competitiveness of the United States in world markets; (4) Proposals for tax reduction and reform to achieve a higher rate of economic growth and full employment in relation to government fiscal policy. The most important findings of this study regarding the merits of the corporate tax in aiding either small business or curbing big business relate to its effect on investment, savings and consumption. It is shown in this study that authoritative opinion is divided on the proper techniques to be utilized and the answers to be obtained. To the extent that the tax is not shifted it tends to curtail business growth. If the tax is shifted, it is held to be regressive and opposed to sound tax principles. To the extent corporations can shift the tax, its effectiveness as a curb on monopoly is reduced. It is the conclusion of this study that none of the bills analyzed can adequately perform the regulatory functions advocated by their proponents. The taxation of competing enterprises relates particularly to the case of taxing cooperatives. The tax advantage enjoyed by cooperatives stems from the Corporation Tax Statute of 1909 which exempted them from taxation. The various proposals to tax cooperatives studied in this work would produce a marked improvement in tax equality but they would not end tax inequality completely. During the 1950's, the taxation of income from foreign sources became a controversial subject in the United States. Various bills exempting foreign-source income or lowering the applicable rate were introduced, but all were defeated. One of the more significant bills was introduced in 1959 by Congressman Hale Boggs. He wished to stimulate foreign investment by United States corporations and to eliminate the use of "tax haven" companies. Although the importance of the Boggs bill was recognized, the Revenue Act of 1962 failed to achieve the objectives of that bill. In 1961, the investment tax credit was proposed as a device to encourage expansion and modernization of the productive facilities of the United States. The economic effect of the credit device has had some measure of success in other countries and up to now seems to have had a degree of success also in the United States. With the growing recognition of the indictments against the corporation income tax, the use of indirect taxation should receive more attention as an available alternative. / 2031-01-01
2

The Home Mortgage Interest Deduction for Federal Income Tax: A Federalist Perspective

Ortiz, Dennis S. 08 1900 (has links)
The debate over federal income tax treatment of home mortgage interest (HMI) has largely overlooked an important, and possibly unintended political and economic consequence of our federal income tax system. The distribution of the for home mortgage interest deduction tax benefit across states is a possible missing consideration. Specifically, this study offers a federalist1 perspective on the federal income tax benefit from the deduction for HMI - one of the largest personal federal tax expenditures on the books. This dissertation analyzes current national political rhetoric from a federalist perspective. Discussion also includes background, current status, and proposed changes to the tax code for of the HMI deduction. First, a Tobit regression is used to analyze the distribution of the HMI tax benefit across states and to test for disproportionate distribution across states in benefit derived from the federal income tax deduction for home mortgage interest beyond that which is explained by income. This initial part of the study is also the precursor to a hierarchical analysis seeking to identify significant factors affecting the distribution of the benefit of the HMI deduction across states. The Ernst and Young/University of Michigan Individual Model File of 1992 tax returns is the primary data source for this initial part of the investigation. The second part of the analysis examines the effect of sets of factors in a causal hierarchy on the HMI deduction benefit. By first controlling for the effects of personal and identifiable state characteristics on HMI deduction benefit, the possible existence of a residual socio-political force is tested. The primary data sources for this part of the study are the 1990 Census of Population and Housing 5% Public Use Microsample as well as tax data extracted from the Statistics of Income, Individual Public Use Tax File, Level III Sample, as well as others. Ridge regression is used for hypothesis testing. Results indicate the existence of a significant difference in the benefit from home mortgage interest deduction across states holding income constant. This study also finds that a set of personal as well as a set of state market, legal and tax characteristics significantly influence the taxpayer's HMI deduction benefit, and that a residual difference in benefit across states after controlling for personal and identified state attributes. Future study should examine the source of residual across state differences (attributed to socio-political differences between states). Federal housing goals may be frustrated as the effective subsidy actually helps support higher home prices in areas where high housing costs may already be a barrier to potential new homeownership. The concepts and techniques applied in this study could easily be applied to other provisions of federal tax, or to any other tax system in a federation for that matter.

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